Since the first wildfires started a month ago, 125,000 hectares of Russia’s forest have been destroyed in 17 regions, and 40 people have died.
Russia’s statistics on casualties from fires have always differed drastically from those in the West. For example, four firefighters died during wildfires in Washington state in 2001. Nine firefighters died in Colorado in 2002. Eleven firefighters died during Spain’s fires of 2005. Only one firefighter has died during this summer’s fires in Russia.
In developed countries, citizens don’t perish in fires. Firefighters perish. In Russia, it is directly the opposite, and there is a very good reason for this. In so many cases, there are no firefighters to put out the fires. Take, for example, the village of Verkhnyaya Vereya in the Nizhny Novgorod region, where all of its 341 houses burned to the ground and seven people died. There was no fire station in the village, and the two firefighting vehicles on watch drove the other way when they were called to duty.
People don’t die this way in Europe or the United States. This is how people die in Zambia and Zimbabwe.
Prime Minister Vladimir Putin visited Verkhnyaya Vereya. While wearing a neatly pressed button-down shirt, he promised to severely punish bureaucrats who did not properly fight the fires. In reality, there is really only one bureaucrat who is responsible for this tragedy — Putin himself. After all, it was Putin who signed the Forest Code in 2007. The code placed the responsibility for defending forestlands on those who had the rights to use them. What an ingenious idea. This means that the Forest Code allows the Khimki forest to be “protected” by those who are now cutting it down.
There were two main groups who lobbied Putin to pass the Forest Code: paper mill owners — one of the biggest being Oleg Deripaska — and real estate developers.
Independent analysts and environmentalists heavily criticized the Forest Code. They predicted several years ago that the code would inevitably result in an increase in wildfires. Even the most loyal United Russia members from heavily forested regions opposed the code, but it was shoved through the State Duma under strong pressure from Putin’s presidential administration.
Although Russia has been burning for a month, the army was ordered to join the firefighting battle only several days ago. Why was the army not called up three weeks ago? Because there is no fundamental system of controlling and managing the country. Putin decides everything in Russia, and he was too busy with other things during the first three weeks of the fires — for example, doing photo ops with bikers in Crimea or singing songs with the 10 spies who recently returned from captivity in U.S. detention centers.
In the modern world, there are no natural disasters but only social ones. For example, the number of victims in an earthquake depends less on its magnitude than on how effectively the state responds to the disaster. The Haiti earthquake is a case in point. And what is true for an earthquake is doubly true for forest fires.
In 2008, there were 200,386 fires in which 15,165 people died in Russia. In the United States for the same time period, there were 1,451,000 fires in which 3,320 people died. Here are the conclusions that can be drawn from these statistics: First, 99 percent of all fires in Russia are not registered. Second, the number of deaths from fires per 1,000 people is 10 times higher in Russia than in the United States.
Yulia Latynina hosts a political talk show on Ekho Moskvy radio.









Putin Sang Songs While Russia Burned
There have been large woodfires in northern Sweden, only some years ago, with frightened aspects for the villages in the countryside. And the trainsystem blocked by harsh winterperiods, as usual.
And don´t forget the flooding of New Orleans in Unite States, 2006,(Katarina) when pres. Bush failed to react correct, and even the BP-oil, outside Louisiana, isn´t solved, yet, with Obama on defensive.
What I can judge of Y. Latynina´s figures, some 0.10 % of the Russian for-ests, has been burned to ashes, of the about 200.millions hectares of forests that Stalin protected, by the law of 1936.
In the US- periodical, , The Russian Review, 2010. Stephen Brain / profe-ssor, historian, Univ. of Kansas. writes of: Stalin as environmentlist.
Stalin´s Soviet Russia is described as the environmental " black hole", that never did take care of the environment, but were hostile of environmental initiatives, fitted poorly with the economic and authoriatarian structure, quite opposite to the west´s liberal and " enlightened " policy, due to Brain, but now this consen-sus has broke up.
Putin Sang Songs While Russia Burned
As regards her conjecture that Russian central government mismanagement of natural disasters is comparable to that degree of incompetence often witnessed in third world countries, I suggest that Ms Latynina use her American passport and visit southern California and New Orleans and the United States territory situated on the Gulf of Mexico, where she can ask the residents of those places how well they think the US federal government has managed Southern Californian wildfires, the Katrina hurricane and the ecological disaster that has ensued as a result of the oil industry driving ever more for reserves no matter how inaccessible those reserves may seem to be. She could also visit Australia and check out how many people – not only firefighters – have perished because of bushfires that frequently take place there and how many settlements and private properties have been destroyed because of such fires.
It seems that it is Ms Latynina’s chosen vocation is to vilify the Russian government in general and Vladimir Putin in particular at every available opportunity, which vilification only proves the rule, held, it seems, by many in the West as an indisputable fact, that if any journalist dare criticize the Russian prime minister, that journalist will be liquidated forthwith on premier ministerial orders.
Putin Sang Songs While Russia Burned
Ms Latynina states:
"In 2008, there were 200,386 fires in which 15,165 people died in Russia. In the United States for the same time period, there were 1,451,000 fires in which 3,320 people died. Here are the conclusions that can be drawn from these statistics: First, 99 percent of all fires in Russia are not registered. Second, the number of deaths from fires per 1,000 people is 10 times higher in Russia than in the United States."
I should be most grateful to learn how, from the above statistics presented to the reader, Ms Latynina arrives at the conclusion that "99 percent of all fires in Russia are not registered".
Putin Sang Songs While Russia Burned
The statistics may not be accurate, but the truth is... it is the hottest summer on record in Russia (global warming?) in a long long time. The truth is fires are a natural occurence around the world in the hot season. Unfortunately there will be those started by human carelessness. There is nothing we can do to stop fires, it is a natural cycle. However, what we do about them is in our hands. It is good to be prepared, to have resources to help villages and towns as much as possible. Russian has accepted help from nearby countries, good to see. See http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/295611
Every country has its disasters whether rich or poor. Governments are an easy target to blame. We do that in North America too. I have to say, Putin singing with spies has little to do with the raging fires.
Still, the numbers are alarming, and it is often through public outcry, that the system is improved. This is true for every country.